A universe without God.

lifegazer said:

That's 6 posts between two of you, and none relevant to my post from tonight.

Yup, still ignoring all the other arguments like they will magically go away.


Address my argument or fade away. You're wasting my time and exhibiting the fact that you have nothing to offer worth addressing.

Wow, temper tantrum, eh? You threw up the checker board again and excepted to start all over, and are now calling the other player(s) losers.

Sorry lifegazer, I already addressed your arguments. You choose to ignore them because they would actually make you think critically about your philosophy. You will now take this post as proof that you are right, and that I don't know what I'm talking about, so you don't even have to worry about all that stuff I said. Sleep well.
 
Dancing David said:
It could be that the primal cause did that, and then decided to fracture itself into a series of causes that are all independant of each other.
Well, it could be, but then those multiple "primal-causes" would be an effect of the original primal-cause and, as such, would not be primal. I'm talking about two or more completely independent primal-causes having an effects on the universe.

edited to fix typo because I'm doing too many things at once.
 
Upchurch said:
Well, it could be, but then those multiple "primal-causes" would be an effect of the original primal-cause and, as such, would not be primal. I'm talking about two or more completely independent primal-causes having an effects on the universe.

And no matter what the primal-cause was, you could argue that it was "caused" by something else.
 
RussDill said:

And no matter what the primal-cause was, you could argue that it was "caused" by something else.
No, we're defining primal-cause as being acausal. There is evidence that acausal events occur in the universe, so the idea isn't without merit. I'm just asking lifegazer to justify that there was, by necessity, a single primal-cause for our universe.
 
RussDill said:


And no matter what the primal-cause was, you could argue that it was "caused" by something else.
"Why are there so many bozos out there who ask where God came from (the question assumes God's existence that the question may be answered), when God is equated to the primal-cause of that existence?
Do you not understand that it is moronic to enquire as to the cause of a primal-cause?"

Russ, you are a lost cause. A hopeless lost cause. A hopeless lost cause who cannot even be bothered to read what's already been discussed. You have also exhibited the trait underlined above. Given the irrelevancies of your previous 4 posts, it would not be too unjust to say that you have made a complete plonker of yourself tonight.
I ask you once again to fade away and to stop diminishing the quality of this thread. Thankyou.
 
Lifegazer,

I was wondering why your primal cause of the universe cannot spring from two diametically opposed Gods that have heretofore not expressed their will to create anything. Lets say that free floating in the timeless time, there are the two Gods who have never met. Lets call them Good and Evil. And neither of them is particularly creative yet. They possess will but they haven't decided what to do with it.

Anyway they see each other and start to act willfully. They attack - and when they strike at each other there is a great blast. That strike it the primal-cause and the blast is the effect. The balast then becomes the universe of opposites we percieve while the gods go elsewhere in the void blast each other and new universes into existence.

Is this possible.
 
Re: Meet your God.

Upchurch said:
"'Primal-cause' is actually reducible to the only cause. An entity, for example, cannot be the primal-cause of existence (or of any system of related effects), if other entities have contributed to that existence/system."

I disagree. "Primal-cause" only means that cause which has no cause itself.
It doesn't only mean that, although it does mean that too. Although amazingly, few of your fellow skeptics seem able to grasp even this.
It means first-cause, actually. So, in regards this existence full of effects, it means the first cause of all of those effects. So, the primal-cause of this existence (full of effects) is the only cause of this existence (full of effects) since every-thing within this existence emanates from that primal-cause.
When we discuss the primal-cause of existential effects, we are literally speaking about the singular cause of every effect within existence. Hence, we are discussing the singular cause of every effect within the primal-cause, since the primal-cause IS existence until other things are effected into [perceived] being.
It may or may not be the case that our universe has only one primal-cause, but there is nothing in the definition of "primal-cause" that necessitates it. If you are going to assert that this is the case, you'll need to prove that there is only one primal-cause.
My argument reasons that a primal-cause is a boundless and indivisible entity (an entity existing at singularity). In fact, my argument reduces a primal-cause to the singular whole of existence. Which part of my reasoning did you disagree with?
 
Re: Re: Meet your God.

lifegazer said:

When we discuss the primal-cause of existential effects, we are literally speaking about the singular cause of every effect within existence.
First-cause, primal-cause, whatever. How do you show that such a thing is singular? It is just as possible that there are multiple acausal events/sources/whatever that started the universe as it is that a single acausal event/source/whatever did. How can we know which is actually the case?

(for simplicities sake, I'm going to shorten "event/source/whatever" to "event", but I mean the long version)

Further, how do we know that there wasn't a succession of acausal events that contributed to the formation of the universe? Events that are completely non-dependent on previous events, even though they occur chronologically later?

Again, the rest of your argument assumes the uniqueness of the primal-cause, so I'll wait to address it until after you've shown uniqueness.
 
Atlas said:
I was wondering why your primal cause of the universe cannot spring from two diametically opposed Gods that have heretofore not expressed their will to create anything.
Hello.
There cannot be two entities claiming to be boundless and residing at singularity. I appreciate that it's a long thread, but if you read my main post from tonight, hopefully you'll see why your question is naive. If not, feel free to ask me something else.
 
I wasn't clear

They are beyond even the singulaity. It is their willfull act of trying to annihilate each other that creates the singulaity.

Two Gods strike. That is the blast of the singulaity. They stay outside of the universe their action has caused.

Now the universe is created and it becomes wha it is. The Gods are busy striking at each other outside time elsewhere in whatever realm they continue to inhabit.

How do we know what the gods did?
 
Atlas said:
I wasn't clear

They are beyond even the singulaity.
You were clear enough. If you had read my post, you'd see that a singularity is a realm of indivisible and boundless being and that nothing could be external to such an existence, by default.
God is not a finite entity. God resides at singularity by rational default. Therefore, there can only be one God.

If you're remotely interested, search for a thread called "behold your God", by myself.
This is that thread: http://host.randi.org/vbulletin/showthread.php?s=&threadid=30781
 
Originally posted by lifegazer
A primal-cause is absolutely-singular = INDIVISIBLE

...

If the primal-cause is absolutely singular, effects that reside within it can only do so by means of illusionary-perception. An indivisible entity is not distanced from itself. I.e., there is no such thing as two separate points within an indivisible entity.
It would seem to me that perception (even of the illusionary sort) requires two things, at a minimum: something to observe (even if it is illusory) and something to observe it. How are these two things contained in an INDIVISIBLE entity?
 
I am still unclear as to why such an entity would require worship from, well, itself. Is that covered in Part 3?
 
Re: Re: Re: Meet your God.

Upchurch said:
First-cause, primal-cause, whatever. How do you show that such a thing is singular? It is just as possible that there are multiple acausal events/sources/whatever that started the universe as it is that a single acausal event/source/whatever did. How can we know which is actually the case?

(for simplicities sake, I'm going to shorten "event/source/whatever" to "event", but I mean the long version)

Further, how do we know that there wasn't a succession of acausal events that contributed to the formation of the universe? Events that are completely non-dependent on previous events, even though they occur chronologically later?

Again, the rest of your argument assumes the uniqueness of the primal-cause, so I'll wait to address it until after you've shown uniqueness.

I'm kind of jumping in without having read every single message in this thread...

If there are multiple concurrent events, each independent of the other, that resulted in the creation of the universe, that seems to make it all extremely complicated. Is it possible that multiple acausal events started it all? I guess so. I think your line of thinking here is that if there can be one acausal being/entity/force, why not several?

Part of a belief in God necessitates (I think) a causal/creative hierarchy. More than one acausal being is thus antithetical to the definition of God as the singular acausal entity. Multiple acausal entities imply equality and then we're dealing with dualism if not trinitarianism or whatever heh heh.

I don't know how we know ANYTHING when it comes to origins of the universe. We know the world to operate under cause/effect so we extrapolate that back to an original cause by some ultimate creative being. This may be faulty thinking, I admit. For example, I personally don't extrapolate evolution back to the orgins of life and all that.

The formation of the universe...is that different from the creation of the universe? By creation aren't we necessarily talking about a singular event? Formation implies an unfolding of events, not the initial event.

-Elliot
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Meet your God.

elliotfc said:

I think your line of thinking here is that if there can be one acausal being/entity/force, why not several?
Basically. There is nothing inherent to "primal-cause" that makes it singular except for tradition. I'm asking for another reason besides tradition to assume that primal-cause must be singular.

More than one acausal being is thus antithetical to the definition of God as the singular acausal entity.[/b][/quote]Not necessarily. In Greek Mythology, if I remember correctly, the pantheon of greek Gods originated from a love affair between the sky (father) and the Earth (mother). Within the bounds of that mythology, they would be an example of a two primal-cause system.
We know the world to operate under cause/effect so we extrapolate that back to an original cause by some ultimate creative being.
Pretty much, except that we also know of acausal/effect scenerios too.
The formation of the universe...is that different from the creation of the universe?
Well, yes. I was just lumping the two together in a general creation scheme.

edited to add: You want I should get rid of those double posts, for ya?
 
lifegazer said:

"Why are there so many bozos out there who ask where God came from (the question assumes God's existence that the question may be answered), when God is equated to the primal-cause of that existence?
Do you not understand that it is moronic to enquire as to the cause of a primal-cause?"

because what if you are wrong and what you think is the primal cause is not really the primal cause. What if what you think (and even what "god" thinks) is god, was really created by something else, the real "primal-cause"


Russ, you are a lost cause. A hopeless lost cause. A hopeless lost cause who cannot even be bothered to read what's already been discussed. You have also exhibited the trait underlined above. Given the irrelevancies of your previous 4 posts, it would not be too unjust to say that you have made a complete plonker of yourself tonight.
I ask you once again to fade away and to stop diminishing the quality of this thread. Thankyou.

Wow, childish insults, that'll prove you are right.
 
Re: Meet your God.

lifegazer said:
There are two distinct aspects to this conversation. Firstly, does an existence full of effects have an absolute-origin via a primal-cause? This is probably the easiest aspect to argue for... since how can anyone seriously argue for infinite regression of cause (= no cause)?

I see you ignored my earlier post, and have once again reverted to assuming the conclusion you want.

Whether or not you find an infinite regress easy to visualize, you have not demonstrated that it is logically incoherent. You therefore cannot simply dismiss it so cavalierly and consider the matter proven.


Not too many of you (unsurprisingly, since it is the obviously-rational option) have argued against the existence of a primal-cause.

I can think of three possibilities:
1) There is or was one acausal thing that is the first cause of all other things.
2) There is or was more than one acausal thing that together caused all other things.
3) The universe existed for an infinite time in the past and there is no first causes.

In order for your "proof" of God to work, you must prove that 2 and 3 are logically incoherent.


*A primal-cause is the only cause = a singular cause = an indivisible cause.*

Basically your entire rant boils down to the idea that when you say "primal cause", you are referring strictly to case 1 above. Note that this does not prove that cases 2 or 3 are false (i.e. that there is or was a primal cause).


What else can we say about a primal-cause? Well, as it is the only cause of existence, we can know that nothing else embraces it. I.e., that there is no external reality to it. I.e., that a primal-cause is the absolute whole of existence.

Here you restrict your definition (and so far that is all it is) to a subcase of case 1- call it 1a.

1a- Reality itself is the primal cause. It is the set of all effects.

1b-There is a single first cause that is an element of the set "things that exist". All elements other than the first cause are ultimately caused by the first cause.


We can know these things because a primal-cause cannot be a primal-cause if its own existence is dependent upon other realms/dimensions and/or entities (a primal-cause cannot depend upon an external reality (have an abode)).

Actually, it is conceivable that some reality,"set of things that exist", that is simply the empty set. No effects, hence no need to invoke a cause. The set itself would not be a cause of any type since it does not cause anything (i.e. there are no effects). You must prove that 1a is the case.


We can actually say that Primal-cause Is.

Well, no actually. You could only say that Primal Cause (as you define it) "is" by proving that cases 2,3, and 1b above are logically incoherent.


Matters already become highly interesting at this point, since we've already substantiated that a primal-cause is an absolutely-singular and indivisible entity.

No, you defined it that way.


Therefore, by simple default, the effects of a primal-cause can only exist as illusionary-effects, within perception (of a mind).

If primal cause is reality itself, how then can its effects be all illusory? What then does it mean to distinguish between "real" and "illusory" effects? I'm sorry, but your statement simply doesn't follow. To say that A is the set of all effects does not imply in any way that the elements of A are all illusory or the product of a mind .


Anything else? Yes! A primal-cause embraces the whole of existence and is responsible for every-thing created within it. So, we can say that a primal-cause is definitely omnipresent. Also, the forces of existence emanate from It... hence, we can say that a primal-cause is also an omnipotent being.

I hope you are aware that you cannot define your way to any sort of meaningful deduction.



So, in the beginning there was the primal-cause.
Then, that primal-cause acted to effect the succession of things.
How?
...By itself. There was nothing else.
... Meaning, ultimately, by self-will.

There's your assumption. It is meaningless to ask how a first cause causes its effects. That is inherent in the nature of first cause. In effect, you are getting trapped asking "why did the first cause cause anything?", which of course presupposes a cause behind the first cause (which is incoherent).


Will is a requirement for a primal-cause to act. Think about it - there are no other entities or forces around. There cannot be, or else we are not within the realm of a primal-cause... and yet, that's where we are as we discuss this matter. So, if the primal-cause acts, what causes that act?

To say "the primal cause acts" begs the question. If the primal cause exists, then its existence alone is sufficient to cause all effects- otherwise it is not the primal cause. If some 'thing' requires an impetus in order to cause, it cannot be a primal cause. The impetus in question would be one first cause, and the 'thing' would be another (The impetus would not be the primal cause unless it caused the 'thing').


It is absolutely impossible for a primal-cause to act, absolutely by itself, without will. How could it?

It doesn't need to 'act'. Its existence implies causation. That is the very nature of a first cause.
 
lifegazer said:

You were clear enough. If you had read my post, you'd see that a singularity is a realm of indivisible and boundless being and that nothing could be external to such an existence, by default.
God is not a finite entity. God resides at singularity by rational default. Therefore, there can only be one God.

If you're remotely interested, search for a thread called "behold your God", by myself.
This is that thread: http://host.randi.org/vbulletin/showthread.php?s=&threadid=30781


Lifegazer,

Thanks for the link.... Wow - what can I say.

You are certainly wasting your time with this crowd. It completely flipped me around as to what I thought you were about, which was honest exploration of your ideas. You just want to tell us stuff.

These are just my observations, ok. You have latched onto something deeply felt. It is that same thing all religions have. The TRUTH. I capitalize because in you it is unassailable. It is not the puny truths of Upchurch, Flatworm, and RussDill. Their truths are factual, scientific, reasoning.

Yours is intellectualistic in defense of spiritual insight. It is deduced from high definitions. It is above the flawed religions but it is so because you are not attempting, as they do, to try to show how it relates to living life in the world of change. Ultimately it answers so little that is worthwhile.

Before you graduate to Ron Hubbard level, with followers you seem to be crying out for, I hope you deduce life strategies from your intellectualistic rant. Currently you seem to approach this group with the attitude that 'The TRUTH will set you free.' Obviously, they're not down with that. They do seem open to observable truth but they keep mentioning the gaps in your reasoning. Those gaps are really there, Lifegazer.

Your knowledge is coming through flashes of insight. Pearls. You should hold those near and dear - You are casting them before, uh, before uh,... these guys. Learn how to channel the TRUTH into action. You know, healing, prophesy, love; get yourself some cool robes and about 12 guys who like to fish and live the program. Even an allpowerful God is no good if you, who know him so well, can't get him to come across with useful powers ameliorating the human condition. You're good with definitive defaults - define something you can channel.

You are closer to the real TRUTH than we are so I'm asking you to go away, dedicate yourself to the next steps and come back with a fulfilled action plan - something that works. I swear, this group will call you a hero. And Randi will give you a million bucks.

I think you're close. But I'm new around here.
 

Back
Top Bottom